Ohio Village Might Someday Pay Back $3 Million To Drivers Ticketed By Speed Cameras
Speed cameras are a fact of life these days, and are generally accepted as such, even if they are annoying and probably dangerous, since they are a superficial solution to a complicated problem. They are also prone to abuse. Like in New Miami, Ohio, where the cameras were so blatantly rigged that a judge ordered the village to pay back $3 million in fines.
A few weeks ago, an appeals court judge handed another victory to drivers, saying that New Miamis speed cameras amounted to unjust enrichment and also denied drivers due process. The ruling means, among other things, that New Miami is quickly running out of legal options.
Legal arguments, aside, the details of New Miamis speed cameras were grosser than normal, as the town of 2,500 signed a contract with Optotraffic, a Maryland firm that supplied the cameras, which gave the company 40 percent of the fines from the cameras, leaving New Miami with the rest.
Since the programs inception in 2012, over three million dollars have been collected, with New Miami receiving $1,839,914.14 and Optotraffic retaining $1,226,609.41, according to the January decision.
That ruling is a fresh blow for New Miami, but, according to the Journal-News, the case is far from over.
James Englert, the attorney handling the villages speed camera lawsuit, said it has not determined yet whether it will take the 12th Districts decision this week on sovereign immunity to the Ohio Supreme Court. However, he said eventually it wants to appeal whats at the heart of the case, whether former Judge Michael Sages decision that the old speed camera case was unconstitutional is correct.
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